Thursday 28 April 2011

Iphone 4 Unlock - The Gevey Turbo Sim Does The Trick

I plan on this blog being mostly about Nintendo 3DS and Homebrew games and apps for use with the R4 3DS and R4 DS Card, but being an iphone 4 owner myself, I wanted to touch on this little Gevey unlock sim.  While I am on a contract and with AT&T, I know a lot of people want to get their hands on an iPhone 4, new or second hand, but don't want to sign up for term contracts, maybe they want to use it as a prepaid phone, or you're locked into a contract already, on a different carrier, and want some iPhone 4 goodness.  That's where the Gevey Iphone 4 Unlock comes into play. 


The Gevey unlock sim is an interpolator.  It sits between your actual sim card and your iphone 4, and magically unlocks your iphone.  The people behind it have made sure that it works with the iPhone 4 on all the latest iOS versions and the basebands that are not able to be unlocked using any software unlock.  What I like about the gevey sim is the fact that I don't have to jailbreak my iphone 4 to be able to use it.  I never jailbroke my iphone 3GS (didn't personally see the need - I'm not knocking jailbreaking, just isn't for me), and I haven't yet done so on my iPhone 4 either. 

And with the newest iOS version, a jailbreak is possible, but an unlock is not, so the motivation for a Jailbreak goes away instantly (I know a lot of people that jailbreak ONLY to be able to unlock their phones), and that is what the appeal of the Gevey sim is.  You don't need to jailbreak your phone, or use any type of custom firmware with it.  Just your stock Apple iPhone 4, and this sim card will get you up an running no matter who your cell provider is.  Definitely worth a look.  See below for the supported iOS versions and basebands.


  • Firmware 4.1 (baseband 02.10.04)

  • Firmware 4.2.1 (baseband 03.10.01)

  • Firmware 4.3(baseband 04.10.01) 

  • Tuesday 26 April 2011

    The 3DS R4 Card And Homebrew On Your Nintendo 3DS

    I haven't ever really had a blog before, but I figured I should start one and start writing about some of my cool video game adventures with my Nintendo DSi, and now with my shiny new Nintendo 3DS system.  I have been using the 3ds r4 for my 3ds console for the last 2 weeks and have fallen in love with the little flash card.

    There haven't been nearly enough launch titles for the 3DS, and the ones that are out, with te exception of a couple of games - are mediocre at best.  So I was pretty stoken when I found out about the 3ds r4 and how it would let me download lost of free games for my 3ds system.  I am NOT talking about illegal games or 3ds roms or anything of the sort.  What I am talking about is freeware games for the 3ds.... yes... they are really out there, and easier to get than even thanks to the internet and I presume cheap web hosting, where pretty much anyone can put up a site.  This site is one example of the ease with which you can have yourself online in no time.

    The r4 card is a homebrew and multi media player, that will enable your 3DS to load freeware games and applications that you can get from sites like the http://www.ndshb.com and numerous others.  In my first post, I wanted to mention 2 games I just downloaded and have been playing for the last couple of weeks.

    First up is a game I used to love on my Amiga PC back in the 90's.  It was (and still is :) ) called Rick Dangerous.  It was a side scrolling platform game with a whole lot of comical jabs at the Indiana Jones franchise.  While the short chubby Rick was no Harrison Ford, the character was an almost exact (albeit miniature) replica of Indy.  Doing his very best to get away from the evil bad zooloo people who have nothing else but dinner on their mind - and Rick is meant to be the main course, as well as his friends - who you have to save throught the levels.  It's a super fun game and I highly recommend it to any platform game lover.  It's platform gaming in its purest form.


    DSQuake is the second game that I have really enjoyed.  I used to be a major Quake addict on the PC when it was first released.  In fact my love for first person shooters developed as a result of Quake.  The fact that I can actually play it on my Nintendo 3DS system is akin to magic for me.  Don't let my bad camera skills fool you, the game looks crisp and clear, but my digital camera is not at all the high end model.  Quake needs little introduction.  If you played FPS games on your PC anytime during 1990 - 2011 then you've probably played Quake, Quake Arena and Quake 2 and 3.  All of the different versions adding more to a game that was fanastic on the very first day of the release of the original.

    You can get both of these games from http://www.ndshb.com - they are free to download and play, though I should mention that in the case of Quake, you'll have to have he original, either in demo form / shareware or the full games, which you'll copy over to the micro SD card that comes with the 3DS R4.